Advanced Station Keeping Delta V Calculator

Model orbital maintenance budgets, maneuver losses, and reserves. See yearly totals, burn counts, and fuel. Visualize component delta v trends for better mission planning.

Calculator Inputs
Reset
Example Data Table
Mission Years Initial Mass (kg) Isp (s) Radial (m/s × burns/yr) In-Track (m/s × burns/yr) Cross-Track (m/s × burns/yr) Wheel Dump (m/s × events/yr) Extra Annual (m/s) Efficiency (%) Margin (%) Growth (%) Year 1 Budget (m/s) Mission Total (m/s) Propellant (kg)
5.00 1,200.00 220.00 0.180 × 12 0.220 × 12 0.350 × 6 0.050 × 24 1.200 96.00 15.00 2.00 11.141 57.976 31.817
Formula Used
1. Annual ideal delta v
ΔVideal = (ΔVradial × Nradial) + (ΔVin-track × Nin-track) + (ΔVcross-track × Ncross-track) + (ΔVwheel × Nwheel) + ΔVextra
2. Efficiency adjusted annual delta v
ΔVadjusted = ΔVideal ÷ (Efficiency ÷ 100)
3. Budgeted annual delta v
ΔVbudget,year1 = ΔVadjusted × (1 + Contingency ÷ 100)
4. Year by year mission budget
ΔVyear,i = ΔVbudget,year1 × (1 + Growth ÷ 100)i-1
5. Total mission delta v
ΔVmission = Σ ΔVyear,i
Partial years are scaled by the fraction of the final year used.
6. Propellant estimate from the rocket equation
mprop = m0 × [1 - exp(-ΔVmission ÷ (Isp × g0))]
where g0 = 9.80665 m/s²

This model is useful for preliminary engineering budgets, sensitivity checks, and propellant planning. Flight programs may use more detailed environmental, orbit, and control models.

How to Use This Calculator
  1. Enter the full mission duration in years.
  2. Provide the spacecraft initial mass and thruster specific impulse.
  3. Enter per-burn delta v and yearly burn counts for radial, in-track, and cross-track control.
  4. Include wheel dump delta v and wheel dump events if momentum management consumes propellant.
  5. Add any extra annual delta v for drag, solar pressure, safe mode recovery, or operational reserves.
  6. Set maneuver efficiency, contingency margin, and annual growth assumptions.
  7. Click the calculate button to display the result above the form.
  8. Review the summary cards, component table, and Plotly chart.
  9. Use the CSV and PDF buttons to export the current results.
FAQs

1. What does station keeping delta v mean?

It is the velocity change budget needed to hold a spacecraft near its required orbit slot, attitude-control strategy, or pointing corridor over time.

2. Why separate radial, in-track, and cross-track components?

Each axis can have different disturbance sources, correction frequencies, and operational limits. Splitting them makes the budget easier to understand and defend.

3. What does maneuver efficiency change?

Lower efficiency increases the real propellant cost. It accounts for steering losses, finite burn effects, attitude errors, and practical execution losses.

4. Why include a contingency margin?

A contingency margin protects the mission against modeling uncertainty, environmental variation, unexpected recoveries, and operational changes later in life.

5. What is annual budget growth?

It represents a rising yearly delta v need. Teams may use it when disturbances, aging, mission complexity, or control effort are expected to increase.

6. Does this calculator replace a detailed orbit tool?

No. It is a planning calculator. Detailed mission design still needs high-fidelity orbit propagation, environmental models, and operations analysis.

7. How is propellant mass estimated here?

The page uses the classical rocket equation with your mission total delta v, initial spacecraft mass, and thruster specific impulse.

8. Can I use this for electric propulsion?

Yes, for early budgeting. Enter the appropriate specific impulse and realistic annual delta v assumptions, then validate the result with mission-specific thrust modeling.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.